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Manoir de Ravigny dans l'Orne

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Orne

Manoir de Ravigny

    Le Domaine
    61420 Ravigny
Crédit photo : Ikmo-ned - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVIe siècle
Construction of the mansion
1791
Transfer from the chapel
19 mai 1800 - 1910
Mention in the Dictionary of the Mayenne
20 mai 1975
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs, staircase with screws, inner chimneys (Cd. AC 27): inscription by order of 20 May 1975

Key figures

Famille de Vaucelles - Local Lords Owners associated with the mansion and the Bellière.
Alphonse-Victor Angot - Local historian Author of the Mayenne Dictionary (1900-1910).

Origin and history

The manor house of Ravigny, located in the department of Mayenne, near the village of Ravigny, is an emblematic 16th century building. Turned into a farm house, it preserves remarkable architectural elements such as its splint windows, its skylights, and a carved door of accolade. Its facades, roofs, screw staircase and interior fireplaces have been protected since 1975.

Originally, the manor house was surrounded by moat and provided with a 7-metre-diameter (pigeon) escape, still partially visible in the 19th century. A chapel dedicated to Saint-Hubert, originally linked to the mansion, was attached to the Château de la Bellière in 1791. The time, including the closure of Champ-Hervé, was sold as a national good during the Revolution.

The architecture of the mansion reveals its prestigious past: a crossing porch (now gone), a porch leading to a carved door, and a chestnut staircase housed in a deconstructed tower. The large cellars and a remarkable well testify to its importance. The family of Vaucelles, originally from Poitou, is associated with the local seigneury, with distinctive coats of arms (silver to the head of Gules charged with seven billets of gold).

The manor house, inscribed in the Historical Monuments in 1975, illustrates the evolution of seigneurial residences in Mayenne. Its current state, although modified, preserves traces of its past elegance, such as the prismatic mantles of windows or the open chimneys. The escape, with its 1,200 bolts, recalls its economic role in the Ancien Régime.

Historical sources, including the Dictionnaire de la Mayenne d'Angot (1900-1910), underline its local importance. Today, the mansion remains an architectural testimony of the Renaissance in the Pays de la Loire, despite the disappearance of certain elements such as the drawbridge or the moat is.

External links